Career
Fouratt lived with Carl Miller, Allen Young, and Giles Kotcher in the Seventeenth Street commune. He became the manager for the club Hurrah in 1978 and brought in DJs to create the first "Rock Disco," with music videos playing as well as live music acts. In 1980 he opened Danceteria with Rudolf Pieper.
He has also been a writer for Billboard magazine, where he has been an outspoken critic of rappers such as Eminem.
In the late 1990s Fouratt attempted to launch Beauty Records, a recording imprint funded by Mercury Records" Danny Goldberg, but that project was short-circuited when Mercury"s parent corporation, Polygram, was bought out by Seagrams, and Fouratt"s acts were let go. Fouratt has also been an outspoken critic of transgender identities and transsexualism.
He believes that transgender surgeries constitute "mutilation", that gender transitioning is akin to anti-gay reparative therapy, and that transgender identity reinforces gender stereotypes.